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Energy and Utilities Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Brooklyn Law School

Renewable energy; renewables; solar; wind; decarbonization; clean energy; energy economics; energy law; environmental law; environmental policy; green energy; energy transition

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Full-Text Articles in Energy and Utilities Law

Paradoxes Of “Decarbonization”, David B. Spence Jan 2017

Paradoxes Of “Decarbonization”, David B. Spence

Brooklyn Law Review

Scholars and policymakers continue to debate the shape of a post-carbon world, and how fast the United States can “decarbonize” its energy sector. Recent trends—including the reduced costs of renewables, regulatory and market pressure on coal-fired power, and successful integration of large amounts of wind power into the grid—have fed optimism about the possibility of rapid and “deep” decarbonization. Unfortunately, however, encouraging ever-more substitution of renewables for fossil fuels creates unintended consequences—paradoxes—that stem in part from two sometimes unavoidable and under-appreciated truths. First, the three attributes we value in the electricity system—cost, reliability and environmental performance—are in tension with one …